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  • OPINION

    Is a global recession really coming up?

    Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 19/01/2023

    » The world's leading economists spent most of 2022 convincing themselves that, if the global economy was not already in a recession, it was about to fall into one. But with the year 2022 end, the global slump has been postponed to the present 2023.

  • OPINION

    Fighting the 'last inflation war' once again

    Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 04/03/2022

    » In 1955, then-US Federal Reserve chair William McChesney Martin famously said that the Fed's job was to take away the punch bowl "just when the party was really warming up", rather than waiting until the revellers were drunk and raucous. Decades later, in the aftermath of 1970s inflation, it became an article of faith among monetary policymakers that they should not wait until elevated inflation showed its face before reining in an overheating economy. Today, with inflation surging, they are developing a renewed appreciation for the punch-bowl metaphor.

  • OPINION

    The G20's coronavirus agenda

    Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 27/08/2021

    » Finance ministers, central bank governors, and political leaders are hard at work preparing for the 2021 G20 Heads of State and Government Summit in Rome on Oct 30-31. With the Covid-19 pandemic stretching well into its second year, the meeting will come at a time of heightened uncertainty about public health and the global economy. And though the mechanisms of international cooperation have been weakened by the pandemic and remain bruised by former US President Donald Trump's legacy, they are more important than ever.

  • OPINION

    Terms which misdefined 2020

    Oped, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 01/01/2021

    » US President Donald Trump and the Covid-19 pandemic dominated the news headlines in 2020. Three terms, in particular, came to symbolise the year: "witch hunt", "black swan" and "exponential".

  • BUSINESS

    The case against subsidising housing debt

    Business, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 31/05/2017

    » At the end of the first quarter, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, consumer debt in the United States for the first time exceeded its previous peak (in dollars), reached in the third quarter of 2008, just as the global financial crisis erupted. Although car loans and student debt have been rising especially rapidly, housing debt remains more than two-thirds of the $12.7-trillion total.

  • BUSINESS

    Making crises great again: Financial reform in the US

    Business, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 06/03/2017

    » Debates about financial regulation tend to focus on quantity, not quality. But "more versus less" isn't so much the issue; the details are. And when it comes to financial reform in the United States, President Donald Trump is unlikely to get the details right.

  • OPINION

    Obama leaves with higher rating than predecessors

    News, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 16/01/2017

    » Any assessment of Barack Obama's eight-year US presidency should start at the beginning: His first inauguration, on Jan 20, 2009. The US economy was in free-fall: Financial markets had seized up, GDP was shrinking, and employment was plummeting, with some 800,000 jobs being lost each month. And two ill-conceived and badly executed foreign wars were under way.

  • BUSINESS

    The Blind Alley of Monetary Populism

    Business, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 14/11/2016

    » In the US and elsewhere nowadays, populist politicians often claim that easy monetary policy is hurting ordinary workers, thereby exacerbating income inequality. But while inequality is a problem, raising interest rates is no way to address it.

  • BUSINESS

    China's Stock-Market Red Herring 

    Business, Jeffrey Frankel, Published on 01/02/2016

    » With the Shanghai composite index down more than 40% since last June, investors worldwide are watching the decline with growing concern -- but not because they are invested in the plummeting market (China stocks are overwhelmingly held by Chinese). Rather, the fear is that plunging equity prices mean that China's economy is going down the tubes.

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